Older gadgets just seem easier to use

No matter what the experts say, my 84-year-old brain has just so much capacity, and its ability to absorb and process new information is not unlimited. I also take exception to that popular commercial in which an adult asks children if “faster is better.”

While I am enjoying my new Honda CRV, I am still using some of that brain capacity to remember where the radio and other controls are located, and just last week a friend finally showed me how to open the sun roof.

When I purchased the new car, it made sense, I thought, to get a new, larger GPS with updated road information. Big mistake! The new, updated version is much more complex to operate since it has additional features that I don’t need. Trying to “save” an address I recently put into the GPS, the obstinate device was offering me a menu of “recently viewed addresses,” “traffic alternatives,” etc., but the “saved” symbol had disappeared.

The voice of my old GPS was “Dennis,” whose familiar, British accent I trusted. The voice on the new device is a nasal-sounding woman whose presence doesn’t reassure me at all when I get lost.

And dear reader, would you believe that the GPS does not come with an instruction book? You must download all 142 pages of instructions from a website onto your computer. As unlikely as it might be: What if you buy a GPS, but don’t have a computer?

And speaking of computers, since I will be moving in early May and my computer is an old one, I have asked our office technical expert to help me purchase a new one. The “tech guy” there, Rick, informs me that not only will I have to become accustomed to a new computer, but that the latest version of Windows software is quite different and is a bit of a challenge to learn. Believe me, the last thing you need when you are moving is another challenge.

Remembering to call the post office, CL&P, the phone company, the tax office, the bank, etc. and assorted magazine publishers and credit card companies as well as which box has the Christmas ornaments would challenge even a whiz like Bill Gates.

I will also need to replace my old, beginning-to-malfunction answering machine. I shudder to think what new contrivance I will have to learn to master, just to hear: “Sorry we missed you. Please call for a trial subscription to 10 Days to Stronger Abs.”

When I misplaced my cellphone charger, I went into Radio Shack to purchase another one. The clerk, upon seeing the outmoded, but still perfectly good cellphone I was using, rather disdainfully informed me that they did not carry chargers for such an “outmoded” phone. So, I had to buy a new phone as well as a charger. That’s great for American business interests. Not so great for a senior on a budget.

As I look at some of the aging but still serviceable appliances and other equipment I am sorting for my tag sale, I have a new appreciation for many of them. They may be considered old-fashioned, outdated and obsolete, but by golly, they are easy to use!

Contact Jean Cherni, certified senior adviser for Senior Living Solutions and Pearce Plus, a full-service program for seniors contemplating a move, at jeancherni@sbcglobal.net or 15 The Ponds at 101 Hotchkiss Grove, Branford 06405.

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